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Canada's info, privacy bodies want open government

Canada's info, privacy bodies want open government

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 02 Sep 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Canada’s information and privacy commissioners have become advocates for open government, issuing a joint resolution and a call for all levels of government across the country to follow their lead

“What we are trying to do is change it to a push model where the government pushes out information that it has available,” said Cavoukian.

But one of the biggest challenges for governments and organizations is translating the conceptual framework of open government into concrete steps, she said.

Governments seeking guidance on how to implement open government ideals can turn to Access by Design (AbD), a pragmatic model on accessible and accountable government developed by Cavoukian’s office that outlines seven fundamental principals.

Access by Design, referenced in the Ontario privacy commissioner’s last annual report, will be launched formally during Right to Know (RTK) week later this month. 

“You want to make the information accessible,” said Cavoukian. Information should be easy to find, indexed properly and supplied in user-friendly formats, she said. 

Open government activist David Eaves, who hosted a panel discussion on open data and access to information at last year’s RTK event, said the issue wasn’t even on the radar at the time. “I can’t think of a single person on the spectrum who shouldn’t be excited about this,” he said.

What’s significant about the announcement is that the information and privacy commissioners recognize the importance of digital, he said. Paper-based communication does not suffice anymore for disclosure, he said.

“It is significant because it shows that the bodies that are designed to ensure citizens have access to information now understand that it’s not just having access to the information that matters – it’s how you have access to that information,” said Eaves.

And even “just being digital” isn’t enough, he pointed out. “An image or a PDF that is not searchable is not disclosure, and if they are not saying that, they are definitely moving in that direction,” he said.

Legault's office hosts RTK, an international event, in Canada every year. Scheduled to run from September 27 to October 1, the week promotes gatherings in cities across the country to raise awareness about open government.
  
Archivists from the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration are among the speakers scheduled to talk this year on open government initiatives they are putting forward in the U.S., such as the de-classification of documents, she said.

The Open Government Resolution, available on both the Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada's Web site and the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada's Web site, includes the following recommendations for government:
  • Anchoring principles in laws and policies that provide "clear objectives, assign responsibility and accountability and prescribe specific timeframes."
  • Building access mechanisms "into the design and implementation stages of all new programs and services."
  • Conducting "ongoing, broad-based public consultations" to determine what information should become available
  • "Routinely" identifying data sources.
  • "Proactively" disclosing information "in open, accessible and reusable formats."
  • Providing public access to information "free or at minimal cost."
  • Implementing policies that give “due consideration to privacy, confidentiality, security, Crown copyright and all relevant laws.”
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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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